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Old 12-24-2004, 01:35 PM
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Default Going Off: Article regarding last years prison riots, Crowley Colorado

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Life in prison can be a riot.
BY ALAN PRENDERGAST

At most private prisons, staffers earn far less than state correctional officers, receive less training and are far more likely to quit in their first year on the job. At the Crowley County Correctional Facility outside of Olney Springs, operated by the Corrections Corporation of America, the average salary is $21,816 a year plus benefits. The starting wage for a Colorado Department of Corrections officer is $33, 284 a year plus benefits. The annual turnover rate at Crowley is 45 percent.


The stingy budgets, lousy wages and inability to attract and maintain well-trained employees are at the heart of many critics' objections to for-profit prisons. Inmates in CCA's Colorado facilities have greater privileges than their brethren in Tallahatchie, but they have many similar complaints about bad food, poor medical care and a general "lack of professionalism" among staff. Despite supposedly vigilant monitoring by the DOC, things have occasionally gotten out of control -- as they did at Crowley last July, or at CCA's Kit Carson Correctional Facility five years ago, when the prison outside of Burlington underwent a major shakeup after staffers were accused of smuggling drugs and engaging in sex with inmates ("McPrison," September 30, 1999).

The situation at Crowley is particularly revealing. CCA staff and DOC officials had ample notice of problems at the prison weeks before last summer's riot. But CCA did little to address the issues, and the DOC's efforts to compel the company to correct deficiencies amounted to gentle nudges and reminders that were largely ignored.

CCA had bought the prison from Dominion Correctional Services in 2002. Opened in 1998, Crowley had a rocky start, including a 1999 riot instigated by inmates from Washington who were soon sent home. But several former residents say Dominion made many improvements in management, including cutting the target population from 1,200 to 1,000, before it sold the facility.

It soon became apparent that CCA had different ideas about running the place. The company set about building two new housing units, planning to boost capacity to 1,800 without adding more recreation space or kitchen facilities. The number of counts -- the prison equivalent of roll call -- increased dramatically, cutting into rec time and prompting wags to declare that CCA stood for "Can't Count Anything." Food service deteriorated, in both quality and size of portions.

"We were organizing a sit-down because the food was so bad," recalls Chris Richards, a recently paroled Colorado inmate who was moved from Crowley to Kit Carson shortly before the July riot. "I lost 28 pounds in three months. Then I got into seg, and they were serving rotten food there -- rotten peas, rotten lettuce, no meat, no protein. When you got stew, it was all fat."

Richards says he spent a lot of time in ad-seg because of his attempts to protest conditions at Crowley. The DOC monitors who visited the prison, he adds, were no help: "They just ignored me. They didn't like me because I filed grievance after grievance. They said that when I learned to follow the rules, things would go smoother for me."

A DOC monitor visited the prison on a weekly basis. But reports obtained by Westword show that several of the visits last spring and summer were as brief as two hours; in some instances, the monitor didn't have time to visit living units, talk with case managers or observe training or programs. Still, the monitors noted chronic problems with kitchen sanitation ("floors were wet and had trash and boxes scattered"), substitutions in the posted menu ("the soup was very thin and the pudding was also runny, like it had been watered down"), numerous security issues and dismal prisoner morale ("offenders complaining about food and not earning enough money to purchase needed canteen items").

The situation deteriorated further in early July, when 198 Washington inmates arrived to fill one of the new units. Accustomed to more privileges than Crowley offered, the newcomers were disgruntled from the start and didn't care who knew it. Two weeks before the riot, a DOC monitor was told by Colorado prisoners that "the Washington inmates are threatening to 'go off.'" She promptly shared this information with prison staff.

"The staff knew it was coming," says former Crowley inmate Lee Burke. "The complaints had been building since the Washington inmates arrived."

Richards says the influx of new prisoners only intensified the resentments over excessive counts and limited yard time. "All these problems started because there was nothing to lose then," he says. "They were just confining us in our cells."

The DOC's own investigation into the July 20 riot found that "the entire incident may have been due to an improper use of force by CCCF staff." Prisoners say that a guard had body-slammed a handcuffed Washington inmate earlier that day. Around 7:30 that evening, a large group of inmates refused to clear the yard, demanding to speak with the warden.

Flanked by several guards, a captain attempted to speak with the group's leaders, but the staff quickly retreated from the yard and started to evacuate the facility. Emboldened, the inmates poured into the housing units and began to help themselves to free weights. Once they realized no one was going to stop them, they started breaking windows and doors, smashing electronic control centers, busting fixtures and flooding tiers, setting fires and rifling case managers' records, looking for the names of snitches and kiddie-rapers.

The ease with which the inmates took over the place amazed them. Construction was shoddy, security systems easily defeated, and the shorthanded staff was clearly ill-prepared for the crisis. (There were a total of 47 CCA employees on duty that night, including eight new hires doing on-the-job training, to watch 1,122 inmates.) Initially, management was under the impression that all employees had been evacuated, but that wasn't the case. Two officers who were left behind when their colleagues took off hid in a cell in a segregation unit. A totally forgotten female librarian stayed in the library for hours with 37 inmates who declined to join in the pandemonium.

Shortly after the riot began, Nolin Renfrow, DOC's director of prisons, contacted Crowley's managers and ordered them to use gas to disperse the inmates. But Warden Brent Crouse declined to do so, saying he needed to get approval from CCA corporate headquarters in Tennessee. The confusion over the chain of command -- actually, under the terms of the contract with the state, the DOC has full authority in emergency-response situations -- allowed the prisoners to rampage past midnight, causing millions of dollars' worth of damage.

By the time it was over, state SORT teams and CCA staff had expended hundreds of rounds of buckshot, birdshot, rubber pellets, smoke and "stingball" grenades, and untold liters of pepper spray. Nineteen inmates were seriously injured, including one who'd been stabbed, beaten with weight bars, thrown off the second tier of his cell block, and struck on the head with a microwave oven. Miraculously, no one was killed.

What was left of the prison remained in lockdown for almost a month. Prisoners who'd been part of an "honor pod" had refused to let the rioters into their house; their reward was to be shoved into overcrowded cells with no mattresses or shipped off to other, more restrictive prisons and county jails, their personal property lost or destroyed. Thirty-seven CCA employees resigned or were fired in the weeks following the riot, and Warden Crouse was replaced.

The DOC's after-action report on the riot, released in October, blasts CCA management for ignoring the monitors' recommendations, inadequate training of staff, its dithering response the night of the riot. The report urges a number of changes in the operation of the prison, including the novel idea of responding to inmate complaints "in a timely manner." Yet it also acknowledges that, short of canceling its contract, the state has little power to enforce such changes: "At present, there are few mechanisms in place for holding private operators or contractors accountable when deficiencies are delayed or never corrected."

The company "will take the conclusions and recommendations of the report under thoughtful consideration," says CCA spokesman Steve Owen. But the riot is unlikely to alter the state's basic reliance on CCA to house its excess prisoners; Colorado needs private beds now more than ever, since the destruction of half of Crowley's housing units has increased crowding throughout the system.

According to Steve Haden, an inmate at Crowley, the prison is only starting to get back to a "normal" routine five months after the riot -- and little has changed. "The facility remains dangerously understaffed as a result of the mass exodus of security staff," he says. "If the citizens in this state had any idea how the corrections budget was spent, they would be horrified." "It's not over," says former inmate Burke. "They're going to do it again, now that they know how easy it is."
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Old 12-24-2004, 01:38 PM
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On second thought, this should be posted in Colorado....

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Old 12-26-2004, 08:21 PM
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JJT
As long as it is posted that's the main thing. I was just reading through all of it again. I have a tendency to get real scared "again." I am sending a copy of this to my man's family. I wish I could send him a copy, but I am sure it will get rejected. Too much talk of what life there is really like. Like he doesn't know already since he is there....UHHHHH..HELLOOOOOOOOOOOO.......where are these people's heads? Uhhhh.....don't answer that I think I know. (and it isn't on their shoulders) LOL
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Old 12-28-2004, 08:17 PM
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This riot was "talk" about in length by 2 people who were at the prison during the riot. One was part of a tactical response team that was called in and the other was working when this all happend IIRC. Needless to say things got heated between the two. If you'd like me to find it I can.
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Old 12-28-2004, 11:59 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Getsome
This riot was "talk" about in length by 2 people who were at the prison during the riot. One was part of a tactical response team that was called in and the other was working when this all happend IIRC. Needless to say things got heated between the two. If you'd like me to find it I can.
I would be interested if you could find it without too much trouble.
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Old 12-29-2004, 01:33 AM
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***Read at your own risk. Bad words and name calling below****

This is a strait cut and paste with the minor exception of me changing both peoples screen names.


















I work for the same company but not in Crowley, and just got home from that riot. You know you are right you gotta be pretty smart to figure out how much safer the state and the feds are. Lets see here the state has had 5 escapes this year already, a couple of riots that I can remember, a staff member murdered in the past 2 years, thats all I can think of from the top of my head. Any then you down in Florence, didn't you guys have a Fed inmate strollin' around Denver a couple of weeks ago? I thought ADX was pretty much a seg unit? Explain 10 murders in 6 years? Really safe there man. It all boils down to how much money you got to cover your mistakes. And no DOC did not come in and save the day I was there, I know. Just to add I don't think CCA has ever had a successful escape attempt in Colorado. Why don't you take a look at the people you are defendings track record. The way I see it is they can do whatever they want behind the walls and razor wire, but when they get loose in the community thats when it matters. Have a nice day.

Excuse me Homer but I have worked for CDOC for the last 4 years at the wonderful world of LCF...you know what I see day in and day out out here. Private prisons are a terrible place to work. Plain and simply they are a business. In it to make money. There for they cut corners. They are scared of lawsuits. It's just straight up dangerous. You say CCA is doing good? How about Oklahoma? nice riot there. Didn't CCA just let an inmate die recently due to incorrect medication managment? CDOC did not save the day? Excuse me but who's SORT took back the prison? Who's ERT sat on your inmates? I think we know what happened Homer. For the love of chirst man they took all of your housing unit roofs. Of course you pay me 7.50 an hour and I would bail too. FUnny other then CCA's Crowley riots I do not remember any riots. Had some colse calls..=) but no riots. I just can't see how a company could succefully maintain safety for the public, inmates and staff while also being worried about the bottom line.

Just wanna know Bart, were you there? Thats what I thought! One roof, not all, and what happened to that inmate that died in your facility that wasn't found for awhile. You all tend to forget about these things. And your ****in ERT teams suck balls, they were out of there before daylight. I was there dude, don't tell me what happened. You guys got enough money to cover your mistakes and not to mention the fact that you are a government entity. You never hear about it when you guys **** up. And I don't know where you come up with your money figures, but you better do some more research.

We have never had an inmate die and not be found for a good little while. Infact we find our dead ones pretty quick...heh. I know the story that you speak, but that was in the canon complex. Our teams out by dawn? Yes the main force was out when it was all done. However, we sent teams back everyday for a couple good weeks to help out. You're welcome. CCA has run up a nice little bill on that fiasco. Homer, what in your opinion caused the riot? I think we both know it's not what the news has relaid to the public. Have fun with CCA. You have bigger balls then I. Oh, and one roof IS all of the roofs in a prison. Think about it.

And once again you have showed how much (little) you know about what happened. That prison is not under one roof like yours for the most part or even mine. It is seperated into sections almost like a college campus, hence the name, campus setup. And the only team that was there past the next day was a two person team from CDOC SORT. I like those guys for the most part, but they did not do anything, just stood around with MP-5's and looked pretty. I enjoy my job and I am sure you enjoy yours. I am not sure but if I lived closer I might go to work for CDOC, but I don't think the few dollars an hour more could offset the benefits I receive. Even your guys say how shitty the insurance is compared to our BC/BS. And god those Wrangler poly pants you guys have to wear!! Ha! Ha! Just jokin', I'm out.

Funny, talked AT WORK to my buddy who go there at about 10:30/11:00 pm and saw inamtes running willy nilly all over the roofs. Would makes sense since they took every control center. I doubt you were there DURING the riot as well. I certainly trust my ERT friend over an obvious company man. As for bene's you got me there. All state employees get it int he ass for then. But my paycheck makes up for it. It's give and take there. You still dodge the queswtion of who took down the riot. CDOC sure did I would say. Hell, even the AV line staff that went to Crowely instead of AV for there shift to get there hands on some inmate ass helped the most.

Yeah, actually I was there. I was the first person in to Unit 1-A, we were the only lethal squad other that DOC SORT. They did not take all the roofs, but they did get I think 3 of the 5, but only did damage on Unit 1. In my honest opinion the situation could have been quelled without the use of DOC. To the best of my knowledge DOC was staged on the roof with only a few on the ground, which helped to get the inmates off the yard. The guys from AVCF did help out a TON, along with the members of SORT that work there. The only reason is because they are so close. I would say that they saved the day, but if they would have been CCA it would have been them. I will not say anymore cause I am sure it is all still in investigations. I would understand your crap talking if you were there and could give eyewitness accounts, but you weren't. Plain and simple, end of story

Last edited by Getsome; 12-29-2004 at 01:38 AM..
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